Tuesday, December 06, 2005

My Toddler This Week: Your 19-month-old (week 3): Fun with Reading

New this month: Versed in verbs
The vocabulary of a typical 19-month-old toddler may consist of as few as ten words or as many as 50. Yours may be able to link two or more words together, (Harry is a big fan of Bub-Bulls and tonight was saying, while on the phone "Pop pop? Blow Bub-bulls.") and is starting to use more "action" words. Verbs like "go" and "jump" are common, (Go has been common, blow is new, help is new) and so is linking a verb with her name (or pronoun), as in "Come me," meaning "Come with me." (Harry is definitely using his name now. He points to himself when he says "Hahd-dee" and somehow seem s to use his pronouns correctly- me for me, you for you...I am surprised by this, actually, and think it may be a fluke). (It will be some months before she inserts the preposition.) Many 19-month-olds are also well-versed in direction words such as "up," "down," "under," "out," and "in." (He follows directions superbly, and uses all but under. Last night, I asked him if he wanted to go out on the porch to look at the lights and snow. He got his jacket and walked to the door. Yeah. He follows directions. Beyond my expectations).

What you can do:
You'll also discover that when you read familiar stories, if you pause at certain points in the text, your toddler will fill in the blank. To test this, next time you're reading a book that your toddler has heard dozens of times, pause at the end of a sentence and see what happens. If Goodnight Moon is a bedtime standard, try this: "In the great green room, there was a telephone and a red ..." "Balloon!" she'll likely shout.

Looking at picture books with your toddler, and labeling the objects for her, will help build her vocabulary. While you're at it, explain to her what the object does, what sounds it makes, or what it feels like. For instance, you might say, "This is a horse. Horses are big. They run fast," or "Here's a fire truck. It's red." You get the idea. And if you want proof that your child understands more words than she can say, when you're looking at books, ask her, "Where's the red tractor?" or "Where's the white horse?" and odds are she'll point right to it. Yes!

Other developments: "Motor learning," favorite toys
Toddlers learn by touching, holding, and moving objects from one place to another. They struggle to push or pull heavy objects, toss light ones across a room, and observe how small objects literally slip between their fingers. Experts call this "motor learning," and this constant testing teaches children about size, weight, and shape. You may think it's just fun for her, and even get frustrated with the inevitable messes that your 19-month-old's explorations create, but she's learning about perception and spatial relationships, concepts that will be important in a few years when she's introduced to math. This is an age when many toddlers enjoy trying to match shapes together, so a shape-sorting box is an ideal toy for a 19-month-old.

Starting last month, you may have noticed that your child was finally interested in playing with toys. No- this has been for quite a few months now...This month she may become engrossed in a favorite plaything for 20 or 30 minutes — an eternity to you if your child has been unwilling to let you out of arm's reach. He can already play by himself for an hour if you let him. He has for a while. It's been very convenient! But also neat to watch!

Since toddlers tend to be enthusiastic explorers, be sure to choose toys that are safe. Board books, musical instruments, nesting blocks and boxes, stacking toys, toy telephones (without cords), and push-and-pull toys are top toys for toddlers. Make sure the toys, and any parts attached to them, are too large to be swallowed, do not have detachable parts that could pose a choking hazard, won't break into small pieces if thrown on the ground, don't have sharp points or edges, and don't have moveable parts that could pinch fingers.

So there you have it!

3 comments:

Caitlin Adams said...

My son is just the same age as your Harry, and I get those same developmental emails. He'll be 20 months old on December 17. As coincidence would have it, I am also going to be a See Mommy Run blogger. Go figure! Your blog is a good, fun read. Thanks!

Kimberly said...

Morgan-
Thanks for your comment. I love your photo. Looks like a labyrinth!
That is awesome that you will be blogging too! I can't wait to see what everyone else has to right about! Harry's site can be "vent-y" at times...I am trying to be more careful with the other one ;-)

The developmental stuff...have been slack on the baby book, so I figured adding those updates was a good way to keep things up to date for Harry.

Have you been running lately? I need to get back out ther!

Caitlin Adams said...

I have always been drawn to the Chartres labyrinth image -- though I am not a religious person. I studied medieval history and art history in college and grad school. So the image stuck with me.

I don't think I have read a baby book/toddler book forever (oh, I did look into some indexes when Iz had a rash recently). The email updates do keep me updated. (update, update, update!)

I have indeed been running and registered for the 2006 Cherry Blossom this morning. You'll get back into it!